Tqm intro

ashwinprince 634 views 20 slides Apr 20, 2015
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About This Presentation

Tqm intro


Slide Content

Total Quality Management

Quality –Indian Context
Liberalization took place in 1990’s
Statistics
Among 59 countries which were ranked by world
competitiveness report 1999,India occupied a low 52
nd
place
in overall competitiveness and 37
th
place in innovative
capacity

Quality and Competitiveness
Why does India lag behind most other industrial nations?
Antiquated production system/apparatus with a high
rejection rate
Motorola , is reported to have attained 99.99997%
defect-free manufacturing on the production line.
In India many plants are struggling to attain a rejection
rate level of under 5 %

Why Quality practices?
Why are the corporates in the world adopting equality
practices so vigorously?
Changing demands of global customers
For example India is 2
nd
largest and 4
th
largest in Garment and
shoe exports
But International Marketers over the past have been insisting
on Indian suppliers for slashing the delivery lines from 3
months to 2 weeks.

Quality revolution
•In these days of mass customisation(ie capacity to
manufacture unique products in batches without
compromising on costs, speeds or product standards)
•Indian corporates are increasingly finding it difficult to
compete with foreign manufacturers who can re-engineer
their manufacturing process to produce what customers
wants.

“Total quality is no longer choice ,it is a foregone
conclusion”
Result:
Corporates in India have undertaken restructuring exercises
Downsizing
Lean manufacturing
Delayering
Adherence to core competencies

Road map for quality journey
Every business organization needs to prepare a road map for the journey
toward quality, the journey that is continuous and never ending.
Quality needs to be integrated into business strategies with larger
involvement of employees to exploit its full benefits
Quality practices shift the focus from inspection to prevention of
errors/faults/defects which in turn eliminate the need for expensive testing
of products as they roll of the assembly line
Defects free products means no or very few customer complaints which
has the affect of reducing the cost of repair and compensation and
enhancing the profitability

Role of government
Studies indicate that in most countries –Japan,U.S,Germany
etc ,the role of the government has been critical factor in
catalyzing the quality movement
Quality Scene in India
 CII
FICCI
NPC
Bureau of Indian Standards
Indian Statistical Institute(ISI)

Concepts of quality
Definitions by various Quality Gurus
Quality is the fitness for use (Dr.Juran)
Quality is a predictable degree of uniformity and dependability
at low cost and suited to the market(Deming)
Quality is conformance to requirements (Crosby)
Quality is the minimum loss imparted by a product to society
from the time the product is shipped(Taguchi)

Universally accepted definition of quality
Definition of quality provided by ISO
Quality is the totality of characteristics of an entity that satisfies
the stated and implied needs of the customer.
Stated needs: are the needs which the customer specifies for the
procurement of goods or services .They are the purchase
indent for an organization and the physical parameters or the
tangible description of the product or service.
Implied needs : are the associated functions that the product is
supposed to perform irrespective of whether they are stated or
not.

Product
The term ‘Product’ means in terms of quality
measurement, is result of activities or processes and
includes service,hardware,processed materials, software
or combination thereof.
It can be tangible eg: Assemblies, processed materials
Intangible: Knowledge or concepts or a combination
thereof

Dimensions of quality
Performance
Features
Reliability
Conformity
Durability
Serviceability
Aesthetics
Perceived quality
For a Manufactured Product

Dimensions of quality
•For Service
 Time
Timeliness
Completeness
Consistency
Accessibility and convenience
Accuracy
Responsiveness

Total Quality Management: An Overview
Definition provided by ISO
“ Total quality management is the management approach of an
organisation,centered on quality,based on the participation of all its
members and aiming a long-term success through customer
satisfaction and benefits to all members of the organization and to
society
Total quality forum of U.S.A defines TQM as
“TQM is a people focused management system that aims at continual
increase in customer satisfaction at continually lower cost.TQM is a
total system approach and an integral part of high-level strategy. it
works horizontally across functions and departments, involving all
employees top to bottom and exceeds backwards and forwards to
include the supply chain and the customer chain”

Elements of TQM
Recognition
Training
Teamwork
Leadership
Integrity & ethics
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Historical evolution of quality
Until the 1960s
Prior to the 20
th
century Quality is an art
Demand overcome potential
production
An era of workmanship
F.Taylor(1900s) The scientific approach to
management/standardization/i
nspection and supervision
Shewart(1930s)  Use of statistical principles
Late (1930s) Quality standards and
approaches are introduced in
France and Japan

Historical evolution of quality
1942-1946  Great efforts were initiated
during world war II due to
procurement problems
Deming, Dodge and Juran
played vital roles in the field of
quality
Concept of Acceptance
sampling was devised
Founding of Japan standard
Association
Founding of ASQC
1950 Visits by Deming to Japan

Historical evolution of quality
1951-1957  Quality assurance is
increasingly being accepted
TQC in Japan(Feigenbaum
and Juran)
Founding of European
organization for control of
quality(France,Germany,Italy,H
olland,England)
After 1960s
1961  The martin co in U.S.A
introduces the Zero-defects
approach.

Historical evolution of quality
1962  Quality circles are started in
Japan
1964-1970  Ishikawa publishes book son
quality management and
quality circles
Concept of Total quality is
affirmed and devised in
Japanese Industries
1970-1980  JIT and quality become
crucial for competitiveness
1990+ The Management of quality
has become a necessity